From getting engaged to Ariana Grande to being gushed over by Kim Kardashian, Pete Davidson’s star-studded dating roster has catapulted his appeal to viral levels. Even so, the former “Saturday Night Live” cast member recently said he doesn’t think his very prolific dating history is “interesting” enough for all the talk.
While appearing on Thursday’s episode of the podcast “Real Ones With Jon Berthnal,” the comedian got real about how he doesn’t think his track record of dating 12 people in 10 years is “that crazy.”
He also shared how “confusing” fans’ intense interest about who he’s going out with can be.
Explaining how his love life suddenly became “all anyone would talk about,” Davidson told Berthnal, “I’m in my 20s and I’ve dated people. And for some reason, that’s very crazy and interesting to people. I don’t think it’s interesting.”
“I’ve been in show business for, like, half my life almost — for 14 or 15 years and on a national TV show. In 12 years I’ve dated 10 people. I don’t think that’s that crazy, but to some people, that’s very interesting. That became all anyone would talk about,” the actor shared.
Elsewhere in the interview, he spoke about how his acclaim comes from dating a string of super-hot women and not from being on the iconic “Saturday Night Live” show.
“I’m not on Instagram. I’m not on social media. I’m not, like, flexing, you know what I mean?” the star said, clarifying that he met all of his love interests “at work [and] wasn’t in anyone’s DMs.”
“I worked at one of the five Hollywood epicenters of where you meet people and that’s how it happened,” he said, adding that he doesn’t “have control” over paparazzi taking photos when he goes out.
Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson are seen arriving at the 2022 Met Gala in New York City.
Gilbert Carrasquillo via Getty Images
“Suddenly you’re in this zeitgeist and that has nothing to do with the work. And that’s a really shitty feeling. I became more known before the work was there, but I was always working,” he continued.
In recent years, the self-effacing comedian has had a knack for courtship after being romantically linked to a sweeping list of high-profile Hollywood loves.
Davidson has reportedly dated Kim Kardashian, Kate Beckinsale, Ariana Grande, Carly Aquilino, Cazzie David, Margaret Qualley, Kaia Gerber, Phoebe Dynevor, Emily Ratajkowski and Chase Sui Wonders.
After splitting from Kardashian in August, Davidson reportedly began dating Ratajkowski, but things fizzled out quickly. Most recently, he was seen spending time with Wonders, his “Bodies Bodies Bodies” co-star.
In other news, the “King of Staten Island” star is set to team up with Joe Pesci for Peacock’s “Bupkis,” a fictional series based on Davidson’s real life.
The comedy series is set to debut May 4 on Peacock.
The Autobots leader, who was voiced by long-time “Transformers” voice actor Peter Cullen during the appearance, accepted the award following an introduction from stars of the franchise’s upcoming sequel “Rise of the Beasts.”
It led to a brief speech from the iconic character before the Kids’ Choice Awards blimp rested on the leader’s shoulder.
″Let this award seal the bond between humans, Maximals and Autobots as we fight together to protect the planet,” said Optimus Prime.
Twitter users later celebrated – and joked about – the award’s recipient.
Well, dear readers, it’s been quite the ride together throughout 2022. You’ve come to us for all the gossip, music, drama, fashion do’s-and-don’ts, and every shred of Don’t Worry, Darling coverage. Here at Popdust, we love to dish the latest.
And as the year drew to a close, you may have been left scratching your head and wondering what just happened? It feels like so much went down over the course of a year that we can’t even remember it all. Bella Hadid’s Coperni spray-on dress, the Queen of England dying, Messi and Argentina winning the World Cup, and let’s not forget all of Pete Davidson’s escapades…
It’s been a whirlwind of a year and we here at Popdust are grateful for everyone who’s been along for the ride with us. From January 1 – December 31, we have been dedicated to serving up all of pop culture’s greatest moments. Here are some of your favorite moments and most trending articles from 2022:
What a year it was for Peloton. They started their marketing efforts with a cringey commercial starring a wife in pain as she tries out her new Peloton gifted from her husband. Quickly on the heels was the untimely death of Mr. Big via his beloved bike. Peloton then topped their year off with a Sexy Stabler to complete the trifecta. I mean, what a marketing tactic.
We can mark August 18, 2022 as the day the tides shifted. A rumored feud between Olivia Wilde and Florence Pugh over Wilde’s on-set relationship with the people’s boyfriend, Harry Styles, launched a thousand memes and even Spit Gate. The rest, as they say, is history.
Emily Ratajkowski, model, podcaster, mother, overall girlboss enters the singles market. After filing for divorce from her serial-cheating husband, Pete Davidson saw an opening and decided to enter the chat.
Comedian and surprising heartthrob, Pete Davidson, made headlines dating the mega-famous Kim Kardashian. After the public fell in love with the unlikely couple, they made even more headlines after their split.
Euphoria Sundays were equally as important as football Sunday. However, after season two ended, the drama continued. Barbie Ferreira left, Sydney Sweeney fell under fire, and Hunter Schafer wasn’t far behind.
The VMA’s always bring a viral moment. This year, alongside Taylor Swift’s Midnights announcement, Bad Bunny kissed a very lucky fan during his performance. If Elvis can kiss his fans, so should everyone else.
Metallics, mini UGG’s, and Birks all headlined the 2022 fall fashion roundup. Everyone loves hopping on a trend before they’re sold out, and now you know where to come for the best advice.
Adam Levine inadvertently put Maroon 5 back on the map when women took to social media to expose him for cheating on his wife, Behati Prinsloo. Unfortunately, it was just the start of a long, long string of more allegations.
Emma Chamberlain took us inside her picturesque home with Architectural Digest. The sage green marble throughout the kitchen, 50’s-inspired decor, and orange bathroom had us drooling.
The notoriously stingy, money-hungry Jeff Bezos decided he was going to shock the world and pledge his fortune to charitable causes. It still feels like a dream.
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The “Causeway” star was asked by W Magazine in an interview published Monday if she’d ever been starstruck. In response, Lawrence admitted that she was very excited to meet Ariana Grande, but also admitted there’s one celebrity who “would knock me over” with excitement if they met.
“To me, the biggest celebrities in the world are, like, Pete Davidson,” Lawrence told W. “Or when Ariana Grande was in my last film, ‘Don’t Look Up,’ I was photographed with her and I fully look like a radio contest winner. I would be starstruck if I saw Jessica Simpson. That would knock me over.”
Lawrence didn’t elaborate on her love for the singer and shoe mogul, but the “Silver Linings Playbook” star has always been vocal about how she’s a reality TV addict — and no one reigned more supreme in the genre than Simpson in the early 2000s.
Simpson starred in the popular MTV reality show “Newlyweds: Nick & Jessica” for most of her marriage to her fellow singer and ex-husband Nick Lachey, from 2002 to 2006. During this time, Simpson became somewhat of an “it girl,” and parlayed her fame in the reality series into roles in “That ’70s Show” and films like 2005’s “The Dukes of Hazzard” and 2006’s “Employee of the Month.”
Lawrence has gotten to meet — and has embroiled herself inpublic spats — with other reality personalities. She even got the chance to appear on an episode of “Keeping Up with the Kardashians” in 2009 via a FaceTime call.
Here’s just hoping if Lawrence does meet Simpson, they do it over a bowl of chicken of the sea.
In fashion, the top headlines of 2022 were brimming with excitement and chaos.
Scandals swept Balenciaga and any brand associated with the artist formerly known as Kanye West. Legislation offered a new pathway for sustainability in fashion. A new guard of creatives took the helm at some of the world’s most stories houses, while a recession loomed over the whole industry.
Ever since the pandemic struck in 2020, the years have felt as though they’ve all bled together. That’s certainly true for fashion news — so, we’re recapping the biggest headlines in the industry from 2022, from the biggest controversies to the most notable moments of progress.
Designers Act Amid Russia’s war on Ukraine
Photo: Dimitar Dilkoff/Getty Images
In a major escalation of a longstanding conflict, Russia invaded Ukraine in late February, kicking off an intensified war that hasn’t stopped. The fashion industry responded with letters, donations and posts on social media. Vogue Ukraine called designers to action, while Granary — the fashion education platform founded by Ukrainian Central Saint Martins graduate Olya Kuryshchuk — shared an open letter urging the community to condemn Russia.
Groups like LVMH and Kering donated to aid groups like the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), while some brands suspended business in Russia altogether. Meanwhile, designers like Demna took to the runway for messaging against the war (before the brand was embroiled in scandal).
Balenciaga ended the year not with a celebration, but with a series of apologetic statements.
The Kering-owned luxury brand released its Balenciaga Gift Shop campaign on Nov. 16, showing a range of new giftable items from the brand, “staged around children dressed in the Balenciaga Kids line” — however, it soon started trending, with many criticizing the photos showing children next to wine glasses, holding teddy bears in BDSM-reminiscent harnesses.
#BalenciagaGate only got more heat when people turned attention to its Spring 2023 campaign, released just a few days after on Nov. 21. The Joshua Bright-photographed imagery was set in an office, and among a variety of props strewn across a desk, there was a printed copy of the 2008 United States v. Williams decision on child pornography laws. More controversy ensued.
Every era in fashion has had its big names. Now, the industry is moving forward with a new guard of creatives taking seats at the helms of the world’s biggest, most influential houses.
Meanwhile, we’re seeing some of the most powerful names in fashion step back. Riccardo Tisci showed his final Burberry collection in September, and has been replaced by Daniel Lee. Alessandro Michele, who ushered in a new era of extravagance at Gucci, stepped down in November, after seven years at the helm and two decades at the brand. That month, Raf Simons also announced the closure of his eponymous label after 27 years in business.
Known for his encyclopedic knowledge of the industry and larger-than-life presence, Talley was creative director and then editor-at-large at Vogue, responsible for some must-read columns that inspired the next generation and becoming one of the first Black editors to reach the top of the masthead.
Raised in the Jim Crow South, Talley detailed his ascension in fashion and the racism he had to work against in his memoir, “The Chiffon Trenches.” He peeled back the curtain with language as entertaining as it is profound, welcoming wonder in a world often guarded by walls. He ushered in a new guard of dreamers, building his audience and developing close ties with educational institutions like SCAD.
As Fashionista reported, size diversity on the runway regressed in 2022, with the number of New York Fashion Week shows featuring non-sample-sized models dwindling from past seasons, after this issue had become such a talking point pre-pandemic. With runways often being in the market of what’s in and what’s cool, the exclusion of different bodies served as a disappointment.
Sustainability’s next frontier
Photo: Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
The fashion industry is notoriously under-regulated, but a new chapter is on the horizon in the U.S., with legislation presenting a path forward for the conversation around sustainability.
… All the while, Kardashian was laughing her way to the bank, by way of Skims, which reached a $3.2 billion valuation in 2022, thanks to new funding and ever-loving fans.
“This latest round will allow us to focus on bringing more innovations and solutions to our customers and become even more of a trusted resource for them,” Kardashian told Fortune.
Since launching in 2019, Skims has found rapid success in shapewear and loungewear, with the pandemic catapulting its cozier categories. This year, the brand also took home the inaugural CFDA Innovation Award presented by Amazon at the trade organization’s annual ceremony.
Patagonia literally gave itself away as a company in the name of environmental preservation and sustainability: This year, American rock climber-turned-businessman Yvon Chouinard transferred ownership of the brand he founded to a trust and nonprofit. The company said it was “going purpose” instead of “going public,” making Earth its main shareholder — a first-of-its-kind move.
The year of the ‘nepo baby’
Photo: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Images
For the (somehow) uninitiated, “nepo babies” are relatives of successful, famous or otherwise well-connected people who then end up successful, famous or otherwise well-connected. In 2022, they got called out on online and on the front pages of magazines, with the connections that may have helped them reach their heights of career success being called into question.
Of course, fashion has always lovednepo babies, from Hadids to Jenners to Gerbers. And every year, there’s a new class to look out for in campaigns or sitting in the front row at a Miu Miu show.
Rihanna’s maternity style
Photo: Edward Berthelot/Getty Images
Rihanna has changed any and every new space she’s entered, so it’s no surprise she had the same effect on maternity style as she flaunted her pregnancy in the first half of 2022.
Rather than opting for clothes that covered up her growing bump, the Fenty founder refused to tone down sexiness or her own style. That meant: beaded halter tops, vintage Chanel, diamond belly chains and more. She even got “maternity crop tops” to trend.
Even after their split, Fox continued serving looks, becoming a TikTok star and highlighting emerging designers. She opened LaQuan Smith’s Fall 2022 show and was crowned one of Fashionista’s best dressed celebrities in 2022. She took the cake in ambitious dressing, daring any fan to take it up a notch and dream bigger through their clothes.
“Emily finds Pete hysterical, and he thinks she’s smoking hot,” the source says, “but they’ve both been living their lives and not putting any pressure on anything.”
As for Ratajkowski’s relationship with her ex-husband, Sebastian Bear-McClard, the source says that things “are fine enough.”
After a source confirmed the romance to ET, the duo was photographed together for the first time shortly and went on to have a public date night. That all happened around the same time that a source told ET that the model found the “SNL” alum to be “super charismatic, funny, and a good rebound.”
Ratajkowski revealed her decision to join a dating app earlier this month. With that in mind, the source tells ET that “Emily is taking dating slow and one day at a time” and “gauging things as they come her way.”
Every generation gets the onscreen fuckboy they deserve—pop-culture representations of the all-too-common breed of man sleazy enough to raise problems, but charming enough to make you forget them for a while. In 2022, the first proper Generation Z model infiltrated movies and TV.
As a species, we’ve long been fascinated with the fuckboy, which is defined by Urban Dictionary as a man who is “fundamentally confused,” “superficially intimate,” and “unable to truly respect and be present with any woman he is with.” Past generations’ fuckboys have included The Graduate’s Benjamin Braddock, Sex and the City’s Mr. Big, Andy’s boyfriend, Nate, in The Devil Wears Prada, and Jason Bateman’s character in Juno. These men are not Billy Zane-in-Titanic-level offenders, lewd dudes who are just outright villains. Instead, they lure you in with grilled cheeses or promises to adopt your unborn child, taking and taking until you’re left with nothing but a specific appreciation for the Taylor Swift lyric, “Karma is my boyfriend.”
Members of Generation Z, as defined by Pew Research Center, are those born between 1997 (that’s me) and 2012, and are now ages 10 to 25. The eldest of this range can still remember life with Blockbuster DVDs, but without smartphones. The youngest, however, were born after Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram had come to define many aspects of everyday life.
This generation in fuckboy has been dabbled in before, namely via Jacob Elordi’s number one gaslighter Nate in Euphoria and some of the smarmier men on both The Sex Lives of College Girls and Industry, all of which returned for second seasons this year on HBO. And who could forget the now dearly departed reality-competition series, Fboy Island, where embracing this identity was incentivized for a cash prize and oodles of Instagram followers? But this space truly started to scuzz up over the summer with the release of Hulu’s Not Okay, A24’s Bodies, Bodies, Bodies, and Netflix’s Do Revenge—a heightened, spiritual trilogy in how Gen Z operates. Within those films—all starring and made by women—emerged an unmistakable commentary on male toxicity, as brought to life by Dylan O’Brien,Pete Davidson, and Austin Abrams, respectively, in a trio of fuckboy characters.
Other entries into this canon would emerge with Hulu’s Tell Me Lies (although that story is technically set in the mid-2000s, Stephen’s patchwork of red flags, as embodied by Jackson White, feel apiece with current Fboy discourse) and HBO’s The White Lotus with Leo Woodall’s “cock” hat-wearing Love Island proxy Jack (and despite his most white-knuckled efforts, occasionally Adam DiMarco’s Albie). As Meghann Fahy’s Daphne put it on the latter show: “I feel sorry for men, you know. They think they’re out there doing something really important, but really they’re just wandering alone.”
In their searching, Gen Z men have often reverted to fuckboy-ery, which abides by three Fs: being fickle, fragile, and falsely feminist. And conveniently enough, in 2022 movies’ and TV’s worst offenders followed this scientifically sound theory.
First, this generation’s fuckboys are particularly fickle, with unlimited options at their disposal via dating apps and social media. Enter Not Okay’s Colin, played by O’Brien. He’s the culture-appropriating weed influencer who Zoey Deutch’s wannabe tastemaker Danni (the film’s “unlikable female protagonist”) so desperately wants to impress. Colin breadcrumbs his vape-clouded attention so sparingly that Danni will stop at nothing, even falsely placing herself at the site of a global tragedy, just to get a follow back. Just as quickly as she earns it, Colin is gone again—but not before calling Danni his “damaged little girl” midway through a cringeworthy hookup.
“Colin, to me, represents all of these scum-bro culture-vulture fuckboys of the internet who embody all of the worst things,” Not Okay writer-director Quinn Shephardtold Vanity Fair. “Colin is sort of a walking example of everything that Danni idolizes, and everything that she wants to be.” Shephard added, “Danni has a conscience deep down. I just think that she lacks self-education and self-awareness. I don’t know that Colin has a conscience anywhere.” Deutch couldn’t resist one more dig. “I also think Colin is unintelligent,” she said. “Like a-many-of fuckboys are.”
From big events like the Super Bowl and the Oscars to big stars from Nicole Kidman to Jack Harlow, there were plenty of moments worthy of the meme treatment this year. Here, we look back at some of our faves.
Back on Feb. 13 at the Super Bowl LVI Halftime Show featuring Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Kendrick Lamar, Mary J. Blige, and Eminem, 50 Cent treated the crowd to his 2003 hit “In Da Club” and recreated the video’s opening by hanging upside down. Cue the kick-off for many a meme:
Lot of people asking why 50 Cent was upside down during the Super Bowl half-time show. Thought I’d explain: His breakout track was In Da Club it was a great song that made him popular. And since that day he’s been looking for someone to do the upside down Spider-Man kiss with. pic.twitter.com/wz1XqWj6Ve
The hip-hop mogul also got in on the game with a few memes of his own:
In a now-deleted Instagram post from November, Vin Diesel called for WNBA athlete Brittney Griner’s release from Russian prison, writing “I need Brittney Griner home before Christmas,” alongside a photo of himself at a basketball match. Following Griner’s release in a prisoner exchange for arms dealer on Dec. 8, social media users jokingly thanked the actor for his part.
Thank you, Vin Diesel. The most important thing in life will always be family. ❤️ pic.twitter.com/RUZES5MwDT
Spider-Man was hot meme fodder beyond the triple-point pose, too:
The Acade-meme Awards
The Oscars is a perennial feast of memes, and this year was no different. While reliable meme star Nicole Kidman pulled her weight, there was obviously a new source of inspiration for meme-makers at the 2022 ceremony.
This reaction shot was initially thought to be in response to The Slap, but it was later revealed that it was shot before the show got underway. It makes you wonder what her slap reaction looked like.
Cameras caught a catty chat between Caitlyn Jenner and Lady Gaga outside the Elton John AIDS Foundation’s 30th annual Academy Awards Viewing Party.
Jenner: “Are you spending time around Malibu anymore?” Gaga: “Yes.” Jenner: “I haven’t seen you at the Starbucks in a while.” Gaga: “I’ve switched baristas.” Gaga abruptly exits stage right.
After the nearly-finished, $90-million “Batgirl” movie was suddenly cancelled, fans used the meme medium and the hashtag #HBOMaxJustCanceled to theorize what else might be on the chopping block:
— Penguin Pete 🐧| writer elite 📰🎙️🎥🎨 (@Penguin_Pete) August 12, 2022
Martha Stewart, 81, maintains that Davidson is like a son to her, but that didn’t stop creators from speculating about her relationship with the BDE originator.
On the “Call Her Daddy” podcast, Julia Fox was asked if she was then-boyfriend Kanye “Ye” West’s muse.
She replied, “Yeah. A little. I mean, I was Josh Safdie’s muse when he wrote ‘Uncut Gems’, you know?” But her elaborate pronunciation of “Uncut Gems” was catnip to TikTok users, who garnered millions of views with their imitations of “Unka Jhaaaams.”
Here’s hoping that 2023 brings an equally mind-blowing meme harvest. That’s our one Christmas wish. It’s the toast we’ll be making on New Year’s Eve. It’s our biggest hope for the holidays. Feel free to meme it.
Kim Kardashian and Ye have reached a settlement in their divorce, averting a trial that had been set for next month, court documents filed Tuesday showed.
The former couple and their attorneys filed documents asking for a judge’s approval of terms they have agreed on, including $200,000 per month child support payments from Ye, formerly known as Kanye West, to Kardashian.
The two will have joint custody, and neither will pay the other spousal support, according to the documents filed in Los Angeles Superior Court.
The judge declared the two legally single at Kardashian’s request in March, ending their eight-year marriage, but issues of property and custody remained that were to be worked out in a trial starting Dec. 14.
The two have four children whose ages range from 3 to 9 years old.
Kardashian and Ye will equally split the expenses for the kids’ private security and private school, including college, according to the settlement proposal.
They will also each pay their own debts the settlement said. The two had a pre-nuptial agreement and kept their property largely separate.
The couple began dating in 2012 and had their first child in 2013. West proposed later that year using the giant screen at the empty waterfront ballpark of the San Francisco Giants, and the two married May 24, 2014, in a ceremony at a Renaissance fortress in Florence, Italy.
The two appeared to be headed for a cordial split with agreed-upon terms when Kardashian first filed for divorce in February of 2021. Neither discussed the split publicly until early this year, when Ye started lashing out on social media against Kardashian, her family, and then-boyfriend Pete Davidson. Among his complaints were that he was not being allowed to make major parenting decisions and was being excluded from birthday parties and other events for their children.
Ye, who has fired two lawyers since the divorce filing, also raised several technical issues and demands, including seeking the right to question any new husband of Kardashian’s under oath, which Judge Steve Cochran promptly rejected.
The settlement comes soon after several companies have cut ties with Ye over offensive and antisemitic remarks that have further eroded an already withering public image.
His latest lawyer, Nicholas Salick, did not immediately reply to a request for comment on the settlement.
It was the third marriage for Kardashian, the reality TV superstar, businesswoman and influencer, and the first marriage for the rap and fashion mogul Ye. Theirs was one of the most closely followed celebrity unions in recent decades.
By: AWNewYork/Shutterstock; Emily Ratajkowski, NYT Best-selling Author, Entrepreneur, and Model
I once wrote about how the world was not yet ready for Revenge Emily Ratajkowski. But that was three months ago. And I – and Emily – have changed. I’m no longer fearful of a woman-scorned Emily Ratajkowski but of Bitch Era Ratajkowski.
During the three months since I initially jested that we should keep our eyes on Pete Davidson during Rata, post-divorce, it appears that no one kept their eyes on Davidson. His undefeated, unmatched, and frankly unbelievable streak of pulling continues even after he literally branded himself for Kim Kardashian. DeuxMoi has spoken, and Pete and Rata are together.
To which I say, of course. Have we forgotten her late-night appearance with Seth Meyers from over a year ago when she gushed about the Davidson effect? Where she defends him against Seth?!
“I think you’re being a little mean! He’s got the height. Obviously, women find him very attractive.” She then continues on to say that it’s only men who simply don’t understand ‘what that guy’s got’:
“He seems super charming. He’s vulnerable. He’s lovely. His fingernail polish is awesome. He looks good. He’s great.”
The devil’s in the details and these details have Davidson all over them.
But the Bitch Era is about far more than just men and ass-less chaps. It’s about the ability to do it all without giving a f*ck.
Ratajkowski graces the November ‘22 covers of both Elle UK Magazine and Harper’s Bazaar where she discusses everything from babies to politics to sexism and racism. These explosive pieces mark the end of Ratajkowski as a one-dimensional poster-girl plastered all over boys’ bedrooms. Here is a multi-faceted businesswoman and writer with something to say.
Her conversations continue in her recently released podcast, High Low, with a lineup – so far – including Alex Cooper from Call Her Daddy and Josh Safdie’s muse, Julia Fox.
I hate to be that person that says I told you so, but I was right to be fearful of Revenge Rata – she just calls it her Bitch Era.
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It looks like Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson won’t be rekindling their relationship anytime soon.
It was revealed that the former lovebirds had called it quits in August after dating for nine months.
Despite recent rumours suggesting Davidson had reached out to Kardashian amid the ongoing controversy surrounding her ex-husband Kanye West, TMZ insisted that’s not the case.
The publication stated that the exes haven’t seen each other or been in contact at all lately.
Sources said Kardashian and Davidson “would remain friendly if they came face to face, there’s no bad blood, but each has their own things going on right now.”
Kardashian has been busy with her work and the kids, while Davidson has multiple movie and TV projects on the go.
The insiders said the possibility of the pair getting back together is “highly unlikely.”
TMZ’s claims come after a source told ET of the exes: “It wasn’t a bad fallout or breakup, so things are good between them and they’ve remained in contact.”
Kanye West has been temporarily suspended from Instagram after posting racial slurs targeting “The Daily Show” host Trevor Noah, a spokesperson for parent company Meta confirmed Wednesday. A Meta spokesperson told CBS News that West violated policies on hate speech, bullying and harassment, and he can’t post on Instagram for 24 hours.
West was responding to a segment on Noah’s show from Tuesday that discussed West and ex-wife Kim Kardashian’s post-divorce tension. During the clip, Noah accused West of harassing Kardashian and related the domestic abuse he witnessed through his mother, who was shot in the head by his stepfather after their divorce.
“What she’s going through is terrifying to watch and shines a spotlight on what so many women go through when they choose to leave,” Noah said.
West wrote racial slurs — “Koon baya” — pointed at Trevor in a now-deleted Instagram post on Wednesday, according to the Wrap. Noah later responded to the post, both praising and expressing concern for West, whose first name was legally changed to Ye last year.
“There are few artists who have had more of an impact on me than you Ye. You took samples and turned them into symphonies,” he said, listing specific ways the rapper’s work has affected him. “You’re an indelible part of my life Ye. Which is why it breaks my heart to see you like this.”
“Oh and as for Koon…clearly some people graduate but we still stupid,” Noah wrote. “Don’t ever forget, the biggest trick racists ever played on black people was teaching us to strip each other of our blackness whenever we disagree. Tricking us into dividing ourselves up into splinters so that we would never unite into a powerful rod. ✊🏽”
West’s suspension on Instagram also comes as he and comedian Pete Davidson — Kardashian’s boyfriend — have embroiled in a feud on social media, with Davidson pleading with West to leave Kardashian alone and West saying he’s afraid Kardashian will be “hooked on drugs” because she’s with him.
Like Gary (Pete Davidson), we already have some vague level of understanding about what we’re getting into when we first encounter Sheila (Kaley Cuoco) at the bar. She’s the proverbial “messy” girl that New York so loves to promote in any media that centers on the city as its backdrop. Maybe that’s why another of Cuoco’s New York-based characters, Cassie Bowden on The Flight Attendant, so resembles this Sheila one. Except that, at least in Cassie’s case, the writers are given an entire season to slowly unveil the reasons why she is the way she is and why her life is “shit” (as many a “hot white girl” likes to declare).
With Sheila, we’re just supposed to take her at face value when she repeatedly says things like, “I’m just such a fucking loser. I’m such a fucking sad sack,” “No matter what, my life is shit, okay?” and “Time travel? Why would I wanna do that? Why would I wanna go back to yesterday? Yesterday was shit too.” Except that, when she does go back to “yesterday,” she perchance stumbles upon Gary in the aforementioned bar setting. The man she claims “saved” her—being that she was planning to kill herself before her nail tech, June (Deborah S. Craig), offered her access to a tanning bed time machine that allows one to go back just twenty-four hours. This being presented in a way that filmmakers Alex Lehmann and Noga Pnueli would like to believe is coming across as charmingly “madcap,” but instead only serves as one of many sources of incongruity and annoyance about this narrative.
In any event, as all people are able to do on their “first date” with someone, Sheila can project the belief that maybe this time it will be different. This person can be the one to give her a raison d’être. Of course, placing that much responsibility on another human being who can barely deal with their own neuroses is a recipe for disappointment. Which Sheila eventually encounters despite her best efforts to keep the initial spark alive. To her, however, this date has grown stale. Even though, to Gary, it feels like the first time every time. Save for little hints dropped about how the repetition of the night is starting to seep into his consciousness via various unexpectedly-remembered details. At some points, we even think he’s going to say he’s known all along that she’s been restarting the night and that’s he’s only continued to do so because he loves her so much. But that’s not the scenario presented by screenwriter Pnueli, in her debut feature. And perhaps as a debut effort, the film struggles to bother with much in the way of playing by its own faintly-established rules, constantly changing them through convenient “oh by the ways” (a.k.a. the over-usage of the term “I gotta come clean with you”) that Sheila decides to inform Gary of when she feels “the time is right.” Or rather, when it serves the “progression” of the plot, already stumbling to stay afloat at a clipped one hour and twenty-nine minutes (with credits included).
But, of course, the time is always wrong in that she’s cornered them both into a loop for the purpose of constantly reliving the same night (a Groundhog Day trend in film that’s been on the upswing since the pandemic—see also: Palm Springs). Obsessed with wanting to relive and recreate it so that it can be more perfect every time, Sheila only becomes increasingly disenchanted with Gary as the nights wear on—more specifically, three hundred and sixty-five nights. And even we, as the viewer, grow disinterested with the same conversation topics repurposed in different ways, all covering the subjects of how they both have dead dads, they’re both fucked up, etc., etc. Garden-variety normals posing as “New York eccentrics” shit.
Sheila being so normal, in fact, that she’s running around in a dress that looks like a picnic basket interior as she wishes to make Gary her “lobster.” Which is why she confesses to him during one of the nights, “This is the first time I’ve been this happy in a very, very long time.” We never quite know what’s been getting her down for so long, apart from the standard-issue potential cause: a traumatizing childhood. Which, undeniably, Gary has had as well—but you don’t see him trying to control another human being with Elmyra-level obsessiveness. And, ultimately, that’s the trope Meet Cute (sardonically named as it is) seeks to emphasize: women get clingy (as Pete’s ex, Ariana, said, “I can be needy/Way too damn needy”), seek all the answers to their “sad little lives” in men. The very creatures they also despise at the same time that they expect the world from them. Yet Sheila becomes convinced that if she could just “tweak” some small aspects of Gary’s past, he would be an even better, more perfect boyfriend (even if a single-serving one, based on her refusal to “exit out of” the night they meet). Needless to say, she’s not one for the “if you love someone, set them free” platitude.
Unfortunately, Sheila doesn’t take into account that Gary’s raging insecurities are part of what makes him such a “nice guy” (this clearly being the reason why Davidson was attracted to the role). For when she goes back further into the past (since, suddenly, that’s a new part of the “rules” of the time machine—previously believed to only be capable of going back twenty-four hours) to change key moments she views as “where things went wrong for Gary,” it turns him into a bit of an arrogant dick. And as she confesses what she did to this “new” Gary, he’s absolutely horrified by her entire being, assuring her that no matter what she does to change him, “I’ll still never wanna be with you,” subsequently writing “Sheila sucks balls” on his hand with a Sharpie.
Among the ways Sheila wanted to boost Gary’s overall confidence in himself as a youth was by playing catch with him in the yard (being that his father wasn’t in the picture to do so), dissuading him from losing himself in books like the one he’s holding when she knocks on his door (looking like a bad drag king), The Right Hand of Lightness by Ursula LeGrin (a spoof of Ursula K. Le Guin’s The Left Hand of Darkness). She as “Uncle Charlie” also tells him that “people don’t like mimes” and so he ought to stop miming.
Watching all this unraveling of Gary’s core personality and essence is June, who keeps allowing Sheila to use her tanning bed time machine in the back room (ostensibly because she knows it’s the only thing that will keep Sheila from killing herself). But she finally has to speak out in some way against what her “client” is doing by telling her, “If you erase the pain, you erase the person.” Which she achieved with the “Old Gary” by “deleting a few people” from his formative years, like his middle school bully, Patrick, his math teacher, Mrs. Kaiser, and his ex just before he and Sheila met, Amber. Oh yeah, and she also “added” Tatiana, the hot pizza delivery girl who Gary loses his virginity to.
As the would-be couple get into a heated argument over the nefariousness of what Sheila has done, one of the two old ladies sitting on a bench nearby comments of the fight they’ve just witnessed, “Personally, I think he should feel touched that somebody cares so deeply to take away all the pain of his life.” The other old lady agrees, “Oh that is a really romantic gesture.” But, like most romantic gestures in rom-coms (i.e., showing up to someone’s door uninvited with a bunch of signs professing unwavering devotion or appearing outside someone’s room with a boom box blasting “In Your Eyes”), it’s objectively creepy and stalker-ish. Luckily for Sheila, she’s a woman, therefore can eke by a little more easily with her “dogged persistence” (not quite bordering on Swimfan territory).
To mildly offset Sheila’s mania about Gary, June serves as the only outlet for something like a “conscience” in the story. Because when Sheila offers to go back in time for her and make her parents love her (instead of seeing her as a “mistake” for being a girl), June claps back, “Don’t fuck with my trauma, Sheila. If I didn’t have these occasional moments of complete and total worthlessness, I wouldn’t have this sparkling sense of humor.” Perhaps Davidson would say the same.
As for his decision to pick this role, it’s obvious that he, like the filmmakers, wants so badly for Meet Cute to join the annals of those classic “walking and talking” movies (most overtly, the blueprint for all such types: Before Sunset). Especially walking and talking in New York. Unfortunately, the scenes of them walking along the Manhattan Bridge (where Sheila had planned to plummet to her death) recall the actually iconic walking scene shared by Dean (Ryan Gosling) and Cindy (Michelle Williams) in Blue Valentine. Furthermore, and likely to any modern filmmaker’s dismay, the walking and talking paired with making NYC look “dreamy” also harkens back to Alvy (Woody Allen) and Annie (Diane Keaton) and Isaac (Allen) and Mary (Keaton) in Annie Hall and Manhattan, respectively. Except, rather than the (Ed Koch) Queensboro Bridge displayed in the latter, Alex Lehmann uses the far “chicer” Williamsburg Bridge as his source for romanticizing the city (before homing in on the Brooklyn Bridge, along with Jane’s Carousel next to it), and the idea that “anything” can happen in this town when it comes to love. Even half-cooked time travel-related encounters. Or “meet-cutes,” if you will.
Alas, there’s nothing cute about Sheila’s amplifying displays of desperation as she shouts at Gary, “You don’t understand. You saved me. This whole night saved me… It could be the only thing that ever makes me happy.” Hence, her unwillingness to risk allowing the relationship to be further explored in the next day—indicating the progression of time, ergo the inevitability of their dissatisfaction with each other (or, more likely, Gary’s dissatisfaction with her).
As we finally get to the drawn-out conclusion, it’s impossible not to note that just as the beginning of the movie tongue-in-cheekly wielded Lauren Spencer-Smith’s rendition of “Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow?” so, too, does the end of Meet Cute offer a tailored-to-the-situation song: Damien Jurado’s “The Shape of a Storm.” And while the lyrics, “Strange as it seems, I have known you before” play heavy-handedly, the two walk against the backdrop of the bridge, as so many couples before them, both onscreen and off, have done. So in the end, “unique” meeting story or not, they’ve become just another bad cliché.
Incidentally, Pnueli’s next film, Deborah, is also centered around a time loop premise, albeit with what seems like a somewhat more Lord of the Flies meets Bodies Bodies Bodies type of slant. One can only hope she’s learned from the mistakes made in Meet Cute, which serves as but a botched attempt at contributing to the New York Is Purgatory genre recently jump-started by Russian Doll.
Still not over Kim Kardashian and Pete Davidson breaking up? Good, because reality television keeps spilling new details about their sex life. (Watch the video below.)
In a new episode of “The Kardashians” on Hulu, Kim told her grandmother Mary Jo Shannon about an amorous encounter she had with Davidson.
“You know what’s so crazy?” she said to Shannon. “Pete and I were staying at the Beverly Hills Hotel last weekend, and we were sitting in front of the fireplace, just talking for hours, and I was like, ‘My grandma told me that you really live life when you have sex in front of the fireplace,’ and so we had sex in front of the fireplace in honor of you.”
“I know that’s really creepy,” she added.
Grandma “MJ” was unfazed, half-joking “Not in the lobby?”
“Not in the lobby!” Kardashian shot back. “But how creepy to think about your grandma before you have sex?”
Replied MJ: “I know, but I was younger once.”
Kardashian and the former “Saturday Night Live” star broke off their approximately nine-month romance in August ― but the reality show’s cameras were rolling during the relationship.
The two split due to “long distance” and “demanding schedules,” a source told E!.